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Authors: Jaleigh Johnson

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Cesira. “Remember what I told you,” he said, all trace of humor gone. “Please.”

She nodded, not speaking.

The gem pulsed, veiling the tower in a ted haze. Cesira blinked, and Kali was gone.

A moment passed in silence. Laetin tossed a gold danter into the air. A circle of six tiny stars winked on its foreface as it fell. Morgan snatched it out of the air, juggling it with nimble fingers.

“Told you,” he said smugly.

Laerin sighed. “No tearful parting, no farewell kiss,” he said, putting his hand on the bloodstone. “Cesira, my love, I’m going to have a talk with both of you when we tetutn.”

Cesira blew him a kiss as he and Motgan disappeared.

Garavin knelt next to the gem, gripping the mastiff by its thick collar.

Watch over him, Cesira said.

“Like as not, he’ll be the one watching me, but I take yer meaning. Ye take yet own care, lass,” Garavin said. “The last thing he wants is for ye to be hutt by his enemy’s hand. He wouldn’t recover from that blow.”

Cesira shook her head. Balram is my enemy too. I don’t know if killing him will resolve anything for Kail.

“But ye’re willing to find out?”

Eager, said the druid.

Chapter Twenty-Four
The Howling Delve

5 Marpenoth, the Year of Lightning Storms (1374 DR)

Maybe you killed them all,” said Talal hopefully. Meisha stood in the center of the cavern where they’d found Braedrin’s body. Her eyes were on the ceiling. Her arms dangled loosely at her sides.

Talal held her shirt and boots. She wore only her leather jerkin, bound tightly at the waist by her belt, and her breeches. Her lips curved as Talal fidgeted. “You’re welcome to wait with the others,” she offered.

“Cowards, all of’em,” Talal said, pitching his voice to carry down the passage where Haroun and the others stood ready.

“One step at a time,” Meisha said, closing her eyes. “They’re taking their fates in hand. They’re already terrified to be defying the Shadow Thieves.”

“Terror?” Talal sniffed. “Terror will be when my clothes fall apart or get burned up standing too close to fire-crazed sorcerers. I’ll be tromping around here naked before I beg that bastard Balram for more clothes.”

“Gods forbid,” came Haroun’s voice from the passage. “Just you keep that in mind while you’re clinging to the walls out there!” Talal bellowed.

“Settle down,” said Meisha. “I can hear them. Get ready.”

“Nets up,” Talal called down the tunnel. “Even if you do get them to fly down the right hole,” he said, “how do we know they won’t just chew through the topes and get loose, maybe in the warrens?”

“I treated the ropes with poison,” said Meisha. “It isn’t lethal—not even painful—but it’ll taste awful to the bats. Besides, we only need to funnel them to the cavetn off the portal room. As long as that net holds, we’ll be fine. Get down!” she shouted as black shapes began to pour from the hole near the ceiling.

Talal hit the ground as deep bats filled the chamber. He watched Meisha step back, cross her arms over her chest, and burst into a pillar of flame.

Kali passed through the portal and started to fall. He reached out blindly, his hands sliding down rocks, but thete were no handholds. He fell into empty space.

Abruptly, his back and buttocks hit something solid. He flung his aims behind to catch himself, but they kept going, flailing in midair until something else caught his atmpits and held him securely.

Panting, Kail looked around. Dull green glows revealed an expanse of hemp net stretched taut across a circular chasm. His legs and arms dangled through gaps in the net. All was quiet but for the swaying and creaking noises made by his weight against the rope. Beyond the chasm lay a large expanse of cavern, with tunnels adjoining either end. The tunnel in front of him was clear, but an identical, crudely fashioned net draped the one behind him.

Kail looked up and saw a mifrot of what lay below him; but the shaft in the ceiling was clear of obstruction, lit by green radiances from the active portal. He watched, transfixed by the unusual perspective, as one by one his companions plummeted through the light and down the shaft.

Kali braced himself as they hit the net. Each impact jarred his back and shoulders. The net strained under their weight. Garavin’s hound howled as it tried to disentangle its legs from theit painful positions.

“We need to get off this,” Kail said, noting the frayed ends of the rope looped around three nearby stalagmites. “The rope won’t hold all of us.”

“Meisha didn’t mention a death trap’d be waiting for us,” Morgan said.

“This was probably her work.” Kail helped Garavin lift Borl out of the tangled ropes. “Without it, we’d be at the bottom of the chasm.”

“Still could’ve warned us,” Morgan grumbled.

Kail waited until they were all off the net. Using his sword, he hacked the ropes free from the stalagmites. The net sailed down into the darkness.

“The Shadow Thieves will have ways to avoid the chasm,” Dantane pointed out.

“Now they’ll have to use them,” Kail said. He turned to Garavin. “What about it, old friend? Are we in the right place?”

The dwarf examined the cavern walls, clasping his holy symbol reflexively. “Aye, lad,” he said. His voice sounded unnaturally thick. “We’re here.” He turned to look at Kali earnestly. “Dumathoin is here too.”

Kail and Laerin exchanged glances. “What do you mean?” asked the half-elf.

“Where do ye feel most at peace, Laerin—closest to yet god?” asked the dwarf.

“In Erevan’s grove or Dugmaren’s tunnels,” answered Laerin.

“This is Dumathoin’s place,” said Garavin. “But it’s been tainted.”

“He’s right,” said Dantane. The wizard closed his eyes. He appeared to be listening, though Kali detected nothing breaking the stillness but the distant sound of water. “There’s some sort of distant aura in effect.”

“Meisha’s master lived in the Delve,” said Kail. “Could it be some latent magic of his?”

“I don’t think so,” said Dantane, “not unless her master was of another plane.”

“Meisha was trained as an elementalist,” said Gatavin. “Might be there’s links to the elemental planes here.”

“Kail,” Morgan said abruptly, “we’re not alone.”

Kail turned. A child stood in the opening of the clear tunnel, watching them with wide, fearful eyes. Her face was pale and thin, almost emaciated. Kali took a step toward her, but she darted off down the tunnel.

“The refugees,” said Laerin. “Do we follow?”

Kali nodded. “Light two torches. Keep your weapons out but down. We have to find Meisha.”

“Kali.” Dantane pointed to the other tunnel branching off the chamber. The net sttung over its mouth glistened in the torchlight. A thick, mucuslike substance dripped from the ropes, collecting in black puddles on the floor. “Something’s coming.”

Kail heard it—the sound of ait rushing up the too-narrow tunnel. Next to him, Borl growled from the gut, shifting agitatedly. “Get away from the net,” he snapped as Dantane bent to examine the black drippings.

The wizard ducked away as a leathety wing swiped at him. Twin lines of needle-teeth bit down directly in front of his face. The bat screamed as the black substance filled its mouth and foamed. It fluttered back against a wall of a dozen or more creatures just like it. Their wings tangled in the small space, causing them to snap indiscriminately at each othet.

“The Shadow Thieves?” Laerin said. “Or are these meant for us?”

“I don’t know,” Kail said. “But we’re not going that way. We follow the girl.” He looked at Dantane. “You have the pottal key?”

Dantane touched a pouch hidden in his robes. Within, he’d placed the oblong stone that activated the portal from this side of the Delve. Rays had kept his word.

“It will be safe,” Dantane said.

Kali nodded. He and Laerin led the way down the open tunnel. Dantane, Morgan, and Garavin brought up the rear. Once out of the spell light of the portal room, the tunnel became stygian. The torches cast a glow in front and behind their group but made the ait close and smoky. Kail couldn’t imagine being trapped in the enclosed space for any length of time, as the refugees had been. It would have driven him mad.

The passage turned, weaving in a snakelike pattern for several yards without changing direction. Laerin pointed to the ground, where scuffed imprints of bare feet were clearly visible, even in the wavering torch light. “She won’t be hard to track.”

Frowning, Kali held up a hand for the group to pause. He listened. “Why don’t we hear her running?”

“Maybe she’s hiding,” Laerin suggested. “We won’t hurt you, little one,” he called out down the tunnel.

Far off, Kail thought he heard a whimper. “Let’s go.”

The tunnel angled gradually, and at an intersection, Laerin guided them to the right. The tunnel dipped, forcing them to crouch and move single file.

“She’s smart,” said Morgan. “She knows we’ll catch up to her on open ground. She’s looking for a mouse hole.”

The passage turned again, and finally Kali could stand upright. He shone the torch ahead and stopped, holding back Laerin and the others when he saw the girl.

She stood at the cusp of a second intersection, as if unsure which path to take. She swiveled her head to look back. Her eyes widened when she saw Kail, and she started to dart away.

“Don’t!” Laerin shouted, springing forward.

The girl flinched. Kali saw her foot slide forward and heard the pressure plate click. The half-elf s sharper vision had seen the trap even in the shadows.

Laerin snagged the girl by the waist and pulled her to the ground beneath him. Above their heads, a spear burst from a hole in the tunnel wall, shooting across the intersection to ricochet off stone.

“Are you all right?” Kail asked. He statted to move forward, ; but Laerin held out a staying hand. I

“Let Motgan check the intersection first,” he said.

Kail gave Motgan the totch, waiting while the rogue checked the walls and floor for more spear holes. Laerin kept i a protective arm around the girl, but Kail saw him wiggle his eyebrows and whispet something to het that made her laugh. After that, het face lost much of its fear. The scene reminded Kali of how easily the half-elf had drawn him out, when he’d been a frightened boy in Mir. <

He turned to Dantane. “We can’t take time to check all the walls. We need a barrier.”

The wizard considered the tunnel wall where the spear had originated. He touched the stone and began a clipped chant.

A chill breeze funneled down the passage, tugging at Kail’s hair. Dantane’s breath fogged and the veins on the backs of his hands turned a sickly yellow-blue. The red flesh beneath his fingernails bled white. All of a sudden, he stopped speaking and slapped the wall with his open palm.

The sound was that of an ice-covered branch cracking against stone. Kali half-expected the wizaid’s hand to shatter, but it did not. A sheet of ice spider-webbed from his fingers, the frozen strands shooting down the tunnel and thickening, filling. in the gaps until the entire wall shone white.

“That should hold anything that comes from the wall,” Dantane said.

“Floor’s clear,” Morgan added, helping Laerin to his feet.

“Can you take us to Meisha?” Kali asked, crouching in front of the girl. Her eyes shifted to the torch in his hand, and Kali chuckled. “That’s her—fire.”

The girl nodded, and Kail set off again, keeping her just behind his hip as they walked along the passage. The tunnel stayed straight, and at the end of it, Kali didn’t have to ask if they wete close. He could see by the moisture dripping from Dantane’s ice wall.

They entered a deep chamber with a high ceiling. A pillar

of brilliant flame stood in the center of the room, lighting ;it to every corner. Meisha stood within the fire column, her hands clasped together against her chest.

“She’s killing herself,” breathed Dantane in fascination.

A hearty snort echoed in the chamber. “Not hardly.”

Kali turned to see a boy of about eighteen or nineteen enter the chamber from an adjoining tunnel. He was as thin as the little girl, but his eyes held no fear, only defiance as he stared Kali down. “She just finished herding the last of ‘era,” he said. “Whore you?”

“Friends,” said Meisha. The fire died away, leaving the Harper’s skin sweat-slicked and flush. “Well met, Kail.”

“Meisha.” Kail held out his arm, and she clasped it gratefully.

“I see you brought the whole army,” Meisha said, greeting Morgan, Garavin, and Laerin with a nod. Her eyes fell on Dantane and widened with curiosity. “This one’s new.”

“Meisha Saira, meet Syrek Dantane.” Kail waited while Dantane bowed politely to the Harper. “I wish I could say that was the extent of the party, but the Shadow Thieves will be coming behind us.”

“That’s what the bats are for,” said Meisha. “We didn’t know if you’d be able to find us. We planned an ambush.”

“We’ll need it.” Kail looked at the boy. “Is this one trustworthy?”

“Likely more so than your wizard,” the Harper answered, grinning when Dantane flushed in irritation.

For his part, Talal bristled with all the fervor of his nineteen years. “Trust me not to catch on fire, without so much as a warning,” he muttered.

“Talal saved my life when I came down here,” Meisha explained.

Kali nodded approvingly. “Then I owe him my thanks as well. Go get the others together, Talal,” he said. “Not here— we’ll gather them in the entrance tunnel. We need to know where the seal is.”

Talal took off back the way he’d come. “What are you

planning?” Meisha wanted to know, but Kali shook his head.

“You’ll see. Garavin and Dantane have it worked out. Meisha,” he said, pulling her aside, “where is your mastet, Varan?”

Meisha’s eyes were stone. “Varan is dead.”

“Dead? But your message …”

“Oh, he still breathes,” she said harshly, “and his mind functions, on some level. But there is no heatt in his eyes, no passion driving his actions, unless you consider madness a sustaining emotion.”

“How did it happen?” Kail asked, shocked. “How did the Shadow Thieves overcome him?”

“It wasn’t the Shadow Thieves. They exploited Varan’s condition to get their magic items, but they didn’t put him in his current state. I don’t know how it happened, but now all he can do is sit in a room and make deadly magic.”

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